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Dive into the research topics where Peter C. Esselman is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter C. Esselman.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1984

The effects of movement velocity, mass displaced, and task certainty on associated postural adjustments made by normal and hemiplegic individuals.

F B Horak; Peter C. Esselman; M E Anderson; M K Lynch

The activation times for trunk and leg muscles were examined in normal and left hemiplegic subjects who raised their right arms at different velocities in self-paced or reaction time conditions. Activity in these postural muscles preceded arm displacement, and they were activated in a similar sequence during all types of rapid movements. The presence and sequencing of associated postural adjustments were more variable during slow movements.


JAMA | 2010

Rates of major depressive disorder and clinical outcomes following traumatic brain injury.

Charles H. Bombardier; Jesse R. Fann; Nancy Temkin; Peter C. Esselman; Jason Barber; Sureyya Dikmen

CONTEXT Uncertainties exist about the rates, predictors, and outcomes of major depressive disorder (MDD) among individuals with traumatic brain injury (TBI). OBJECTIVE To describe MDD-related rates, predictors, outcomes, and treatment during the first year after TBI. DESIGN Cohort from June 2001 through March 2005 followed up by structured telephone interviews at months 1 through 6, 8, 10, and 12 (data collection ending February 2006). SETTING Harborview Medical Center, a level I trauma center in Seattle, Washington. PARTICIPANTS Five hundred fifty-nine consecutively hospitalized adults with complicated mild to severe TBI. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ) depression and anxiety modules were administered at each assessment and the European Quality of Life measure was given at 12 months. RESULTS Two hundred ninety-seven of 559 patients (53.1%) met criteria for MDD at least once in the follow-up period. Point prevalences ranged between 31% at 1 month and 21% at 6 months. In a multivariate model, risk of MDD after TBI was associated with MDD at the time of injury (risk ratio [RR], 1.62; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.37-1.91), history of MDD prior to injury (but not at the time of injury) (RR, 1.54; 95% CI, 1.31-1.82), age (RR, 0.61; 95% CI, 0.44-0.83 for > or = 60 years vs 18-29 years), and lifetime alcohol dependence (RR, 1.34; 95% CI, 1.14-1.57). Those with MDD were more likely to report comorbid anxiety disorders after TBI than those without MDD (60% vs 7%; RR, 8.77; 95% CI, 5.56-13.83). Only 44% of those with MDD received antidepressants or counseling. After adjusting for predictors of MDD, persons with MDD reported lower quality of life at 1 year compared with the nondepressed group. CONCLUSIONS Among a cohort of patients hospitalized for TBI, 53.1% met criteria for MDD during the first year after TBI. Major depressive disorder was associated with history of MDD and was an independent predictor of poorer health-related quality of life.


Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation | 2005

Validity of the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 in assessing depression following traumatic brain injury.

Jesse R. Fann; Charles H. Bombardier; Sureyya Dikmen; Peter C. Esselman; Catherine A. Warms; Erika Pelzer; Holly Rau; Nancy Temkin

ObjectiveTo test the validity and reliability of the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) for diagnosing major depressive disorder (MDD) among persons with traumatic brain injury (TBI). DesignProspective cohort study. SettingLevel I trauma center. Participants135 adults within 1 year of complicated mild, moderate, or severe TBI. Main Outcome MeasuresPHQ-9 Depression Scale, Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (SCID). ResultsUsing a screening criterion of at least 5 PHQ-9 symptoms present at least several days over the last 2 weeks (with one being depressed mood or anhedonia) maximizes sensitivity (0.93) and specificity (0.89) while providing a positive predictive value of 0.63 and a negative predictive value of 0.99 when compared to SCID diagnosis of MDD. Pearsons correlation between the PHQ-9 scores and other depression measures was 0.90 with the Hopkins Symptom Checklist depression subscale and 0.78 with the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression. Test-retest reliability of the PHQ-9 was r = 0.76 and κ = 0.46 when using the optimal screening method. ConclusionsThe PHQ-9 is a valid and reliable screening tool for detecting MDD in persons with TBI.


Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 1996

Continuous-scale physical functional performance in healthy older adults: A validation study

M. Elaine Cress; David M. Buchner; Kent A. Questad; Peter C. Esselman; DeLateur Bj; Robert S. Schwartz

OBJECTIVE The continuous-scale physical functional performance test (CS-PFP) is an original instrument designed to provide a comprehensive, in-depth measure of physical function that reflects abilities in several separate physical domains. It is based on a concept of physical function as the integration of physiological capacity, physical performance, and psychosocial factors. SETTING The test was administered under standard conditions in a hospital facility with a neighborhood setting. The CS-PFP consists of a battery of 15 everyday tasks, ranging from easy to demanding, that sample the physical domains of upper and lower body strength, upper body flexibility, balance and coordination, and endurance. Participants are told to work safely but at maximal effort, and physical functional performance was measured as weight, time, or distance. Scores were standardized and scaled 0 to 12. The test yields a total score and separate physical domain scores. DESIGN The CS-PFP was evaluated using 148 older adults-78 community dwellers, 31 long-term care facility residents living independently, and 39 residents with some dependence. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Maximal physical performance assessment included measures of maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max), isokinetic strength, range of motion, gait, and balance. Psychosocial factors were measured as self-defined health status using the Sickness Impact Profile (SIP), self-perceived function using the Health Survey (SF36), and Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL). RESULTS IADL scores were not significantly different among the groups. Test-retest correlations ranged from .84 to .97 and inter-rater reliability from .92 to .99 for the CS-PFP total and 5 domains. Internal consistency was high (Cronbachs alpha, .74 to .97). Both total and individual domain CS-PFP scores were significantly different for the three groups of study participants, increasing with higher levels of independence, supporting construct validity. CS-PFP domain scores were significantly correlated with measures of maximal physical performance (VO2max, strength, etc) and with physical but not emotional aspects of self-perceived function. CONCLUSION The CS-PFP is a valid, reliable measure of physical function, applicable to a wide range of functional levels, and having minimal floor and ceiling effect. The total and physical domains may be used to evaluate, discriminate, and predict physical functional performance for both research and clinical purposes.


Brain Injury | 1995

Classification of the Spectrum of Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

Peter C. Esselman; J. M. Uomoto

Mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a very common injury, resulting in immediate and possible long-term symptoms. The accurate and consistent definition of mild TBI is important in the initial and rehabilitation management of the injury, and in research concerning mild TBI. A definition of mild TBI has been developed by the Head Injury Interdisciplinary Special Interest Group of the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Within the spectrum of injury severity in mild TBI there are several classification systems, primarily used in management of acute mild TBI, that breakdown mild TBI into grades of injury severity. These are based upon the presence or absence of mental status changes, amnesia, loss of consciousness, anatomical lesion or neurological deficit.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1998

Results of 268 pressure sores in 158 patients managed jointly by plastic surgery and rehabilitation medicine.

Philip C. Kierney; Loren H. Engrav; F. Frank Isik; Peter C. Esselman; Diana D. Cardenas; Richard P. Rand

&NA; Despite improvements in surgical repair of pressure sores, recurrence rates greater than 80 percent are reported, thus indicating that this difficult problem is not yet solved. Recurrence results in additional hospitalizations and increased medical expenses. Because associated general clinical and social issues are numerous for these patients, our physical medicine and rehabilitation colleagues are active participants in their perioperative medical care. In addition, the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation also directs a complete postreconstruction rehabilitation and education program for them. The results of surgically repaired pressure sores for patients managed in this collaborative fashion have not been previously reported. Pressure sore patients at the Harborview and University of Washington Medical Centers are evaluated by plastic surgery colleagues together with the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Patients believed to be candidates for complete postoperative rehabilitation are offered surgical repair and constitute this study cohort. Individuals who cannot cooperate with our protocol are treated nonoperatively and are not included in this study. A retrospective analysis of all 158 patients (mean age 34.5 years) operated on for 268 grade III and IV pressure sores between October of 1977 and December of 1989 was performed. Following surgical debridement and reconstruction, patients receive their principal medical care from the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation service while the Plastic Surgery Department manages the surgical wounds. Graduated patient mobilization is initiated in accord with a mutually agreed upon standardized protocol. New or primary sores numbered 174 (65 percent), and recurrent or secondary sores numbered 94 (35 percent). Mean patient follow‐up was 3.7 years. The overall pressure sore recurrence rate (recurrence at the same site) was 19 percent, and the overall patient recurrence rate (previous patient developing a new sore) was 25 percent. Recurrence rates of 22 and 15 percent were noted for primary and secondary pressure sores, respectively. On most recent examination, 131 patients (83 percent) had intact pelvic and perineal skin. These results support a collaborative approach to the management of high‐grade pressure sore patients. Our protocol of mutual patient evaluation followed by surgical reconstruction and postoperative rehabilitation yields notably low recurrence rates of both primary and secondary sores. In addition, the high percentage of patients who manifest long‐term maintenance of skin integrity demonstrates the excellent education in personal skin and selfcare that this approach provides. Not only do patients enjoy successful and durable reconstructive results, but additional hospitalizations and health care expenses implicit to pressure sore recurrence are consequently diminished. This collaborative clinical effort remains our standard of care. (Plast. Reconstr. Surg. 102: 765, 1998.)


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2008

The effect of telephone counselling on reducing post-traumatic symptoms after mild traumatic brain injury: A randomised trial

Kathleen R. Bell; Jeanne M. Hoffman; Nancy Temkin; Janet M. Powell; Robert T. Fraser; Peter C. Esselman; Jason Barber; Sureyya Dikmen

Background: Mild traumatic brain injury (MTBI) is a significant public health problem affecting approximately 1 million people annually in the USA. A total of 10–15% of individuals are estimated to have persistent post-traumatic symptoms. This study aimed to determine whether focused, scheduled telephone counselling during the first 3 months after MTBI decreases symptoms and improves functioning at 6 months. Methods: This was a two-group, parallel, randomised clinical trial with the outcome assessed by blinded examiner at 6 months after injury. 366 of 389 eligible subjects aged 16 years or older with MTBI were enrolled in the emergency department, with an 85% follow-up completion rate. Five telephone calls were completed, individualised for patient concerns and scripted to address education, reassurance and reactivation. Two composites were analysed, one relating to post-traumatic symptoms that developed or worsened after injury and their impact on functioning, the other related to general health status. Results: The telephone counselling group had a significantly better outcome for symptoms (6.6 difference in adjusted mean symptom score, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.2 to 12.0), but no difference in general health outcome (1.5 difference in adjusted mean functional score, 95% CI 2.2 to 5.2). A smaller proportion of the treatment group had each individual symptom (except anxiety) at assessment. Similarly, fewer of the treatment group had daily functioning negatively impacted by symptoms with the largest differences in work, leisure activities, memory and concentration and financial independence. Conclusions: Telephone counselling, focusing on symptom management, was successful in reducing chronic symptoms after MTBI. Trial registration number: ClinicalTrials.gov, #NCT00483444


Journal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation | 2001

Time off work and return to work rates after burns: systematic review of the literature and a large two-center series

S. B. Brych; Loren H. Engrav; Frederick P. Rivara; J. T. Ptacek; D. C. Lezotte; Peter C. Esselman; Karen J. Kowalske; Nicole S. Gibran

The literature on time off work and return to work after burns is incomplete. This study addresses this and includes a systematic literature review and two-center series. The literature was searched from 1966 through October 2000. Two-center data were collected on 363 adults employed outside of the home at injury. Data on employment, general demographics, and burn demographics were collected. The literature search found only 10 manuscripts with objective data, with a mean time off work of 10 weeks and %TBSA as the most important predictor of time off work. The mean time off work for those who returned to work by 24 months was 17 weeks and correlated with %TBSA. The probability of returning to work was reduced by a psychiatric history and extremity burns and was inversely related to %TBSA. In the two-center study, 66% and 90% of survivors had returned to work at 6 and 24 months post-burn. However, in the University of Washington subset of the data, only 37% had returned to the same job with the same employer without accommodations at 24 months, indicating that job disruption is considerable. The impact of burns on work is significant.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1997

The effect of Medicare's payment system for rehabilitation hospitals on length of stay, charges, and total payments.

Leighton Chan; Thomas D. Koepsell; Richard A. Deyo; Peter C. Esselman; Jodie K. Haselkorn; Joseph K. Lowery; Walter C. Stolov

BACKGROUND Medicares system for the payment of rehabilitation hospitals is based on limits derived from a hospitals average allowable charges per patient discharged during a base year. Thereafter, payments are capped but hospitals receive incentive payments if charges per patient are reduced in succeeding years. We hypothesized that per-patient charges would increase during the base year and then decrease in subsequent years. Hospitals would thus have higher reimbursement limits and receive incentive payments for reducing their charges. METHODS We analyzed Medicare claims data for 190,921 discharges from 69 rehabilitation hospitals from 1987 through 1994. We compared total charges, length of stay, and interim payments before, during, and after each hospitals base year. RESULTS After we controlled for inflation and temporal and seasonal trends, mean charges per patient discharged increased from


Aging Clinical and Experimental Research | 1997

A comparison of the effects of three types of endurance training on balance and other fall risk factors in older adults

David M. Buchner; M. E. Cress; B. J. De Lateur; Peter C. Esselman; Anthony J. Margherita; Robert Price; Edward H. Wagner

25,131 for patients discharged before the base year to

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Karen J. Kowalske

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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R Holavanahalli

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Nancy Temkin

University of Washington

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Kathleen R. Bell

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Sureyya Dikmen

University of Washington

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David N. Herndon

University of Texas Medical Branch

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